One of the biggest names in music in the United Kingdom is Lily Allen, who has had enormous success with studio albums, singles and television appearances since she emerged on the scene in late 2005 with songs like “Smile”. Her career has seen her work as a singer, an actress and even a talk show host when “Lily Allen and Friends” was screened on BBC Three.
So it goes without saying that whenever she announces new live shows, fans from across the country will be eager to get hold of Lily Allen tickets, so that they can enjoy hearing some of the most recognisable songs in the UK charts.
Allen is the daughter of musician and performer Keith Allen and the movie producer Alison Owen and she began her climb to the top in 2005 when she penned some songs, recorded them with a major record label and posted them on her MySpace profile, quickly making a name for herself. Up to this point, the label had not been able to focus many resources on her work, but as soon as her MySpace experiment paid off she would find her way. The result would be an emergence into the mainstream, with the music press giving her plenty of attention as her social networking figures increased and music fans began to take note. For the rest of the decade it became difficult not to hear her songs on the radio, or to see her music videos on television. Lily Allen had made her mark.
She would soon put together her debut album in the form of “Alright, Still” which featured the single “Smile” and would achieve monumental success, earning her a Grammy Award nomination and paving the way for her own talk-show. Three years later she would appear in the charts once again with the album “It’s Not Me, It’s You”, which began to experiment with further styles and achieved positive critical reception before hitting number one in the charts. Songs like “The Fear”, “Not Fair” and “Everyone’s At It” would continue to dominate radio playlists and cemented her legacy as a well known recording artist with a lot to offer.
But albums were not the only way in which Lily Allen impressed her fans; she also did it by appearing on stages worldwide, appearing at Glastonbury, T in the Park and across the UK, Canada and the United States. She had come a long way from her early days when posting her songs on MySpace was the only way to allow them to be heard.
With a huge following, Lily Allen will remain in the public eye for some time to come and whilst a hiatus began after the release of her second album it remains to be seen what tricks she still has up her sleeve. But one thing is certain, when she returns to the stage, Lily Allen tickets will sell out fast.